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K MNDUNCES
"1 16 COTTON
e ———
ew Staple Developed to
Meet Demand for Long
Draft Spinning.
00l
> et _ihe shortage of long
|,” ;.‘,‘H““ in the Eastern South,
prap’s H‘H{)‘U(n(l Seed company,
~, S, (Y (of which David
it “.‘M'l_l. is president) and who
: \\lm»ly recognized as the
w”‘\ foremost cotton seced
Fo < have developed & Vely
Pree alle new: cotton .of very
"lj:”“\.‘,‘;‘,.nuln and 1 1-8 inch
l, in South Carolina, Nonh{
. Georgia, Alabama, Mis
‘\”,N Arkansas, Louisiana, Mis-]
buri and virginia, the new seed'
;“}".'tl has been named Coker 100,
‘,:\ generally produced 1 1-8 inch
taple and its average _\'ie]fi has
on well above other varieties.
Most of the cotton it has pro
huced has sold at 225 _points or
ore above December, New York.
I*] ..~nn:w cases it has brought sls
o hale above short cotton,
:\ crop of 1,135 acres at Trih-l
et Miss,, produced 1,335 500~
ound bales. pProduction of this}
botton at the Coker experimental
arms at HHartsville, S.. C., aver-‘
sed 661 pounds of lint per acre
\hmi,. 4 small crop planted under)
rdinary field conditions on June
oth produced 672 pounds on a
easured arce.: An early planting
sroduced 821 pounds. ’
Many cotton manufacturers in
1| parts of the country haye
yquipped their mills for long draft
pinning. Most mills so equipped
re calling for cotton of longer
nd better staple. This new de-!
sand is largely responsible for
he scarcity of and urgent inquiry
or cottons of staple around 1 1-8
nch.
The evidence shows that the new
oker 100 cotton will not only
reatly increase the yield from
ood lands not infected with cot
on wilt, but will also greatly re-!
ieve the shortage of 1 1-8 inch
otton, while putting many eXtra
ollars into the poeckets of cotton
rowers who plant this variety.
Hollywood Gossip
BY PAUL HARRISON
EA Service Staff Correspondent
HOLLYWOOD. — Short takes®
‘harles Guy Fulke Greville, the
larl of Warwick, is working in
lollywood, but. when Warner
srothers wanted somebody to im
ersonate an earliex Earl of )V&l“'
pick in “The Prince and the Pau
they hired an actor named
obert Warwick. The screen
lame of the eurrent, genuine Ea*l
i Warwick is Michael Brooke.
Anng Sten’s elegant mountain
ide home is beginning to slip
lownhill. If it keeps going, she'll
jave to buy a lot in the valley to
eceive it.
And speaking of valleys, Helen
Jurges Ceeil DeMille’s new
creen find, isn’t sun-bathing any
nore. She isn't sun-bathing be
ause she discovered that three of
) lltop neighbors have bought
Frost-laden mights have ' been
eving no end of havec with the
edule of film companies trying
Y Work on outdoor locations. Rea
1L 1S that the fruit growers set
VUL thousands =of smudge pots,
n¢ the oily smoke drifts through
1“ valleys for . hours, eutticg
VI the light
. ~ Coming Up
- sUUVe wondered what ever
APrened o) “Lost Horizon,”
stll shooting on it after
© hese months, But it will be
\ iy day now, I
+SO, Charlie Chaplin is getting
% With preparations for “Re- |
e ! ‘which' he will direct
- otte Goddard. ‘The cameras
o begin to grind in about siw
4 Comedienne was rocon-l
ed with hep estrenged husband‘
-t about six hours the other day.
“Verything seemed to be patchedi
1D fine, untj they began discuss
-2 a way 1, break the good news,
O thejpr friends, That led to al
"er quarrel, o they're separar.—'
* 4gdin,
—And Chating Blonds .
Grouchy Marx and a minor exe
ttve got intouasy argument. The
“. did most’ of the talking,
M grey very loud about it. Said!
.-: “10, When he gould get in a'
p o Cdßewise: «pye got a bra- |
"°F Who made 4 fortune By keep-'
"8 his mouth ghygyn |
P
For ‘the first ‘tithe in her screen
eEr, Virginia Bruce isn't wear
o Makeup jn a picture, Hal!
r".‘."'“" ‘“”J"l‘um:m-turned-directm‘. |
0 When wopg was started onl
(‘f""\“ i"‘”l‘l“‘f:.\'," that she looked‘
,‘"‘,"" Vithout greyme paint. No-
L toey thought of such a simple‘
L ration hefgpa although all Hol-!
Wood hgg fommented that shei
148 lookeq Prettier off the screen |
"4n on
]‘ Healy Says he's taking a
ng POdence courgs in boxing
oo S Retting along fine. He
«',”"" Yt the postman the other
I
i
y Movie. Non-Goers |
s ¥ Norman Hait of the fam
torgpe i D Seas wilthan S of
(‘;;l;sz‘ and Haj, is in Holly-I
Netion . CONferences an the pro-I
Tan “Hurricane” Says he
id hig Partner don‘t BU to m}
Former Champions
Fight This Week;
Louis on Program
NEW YORK.—(ATF')—Three for
mer titleholders and an outstand
ing contender for heavyweight
honors feature this week's nat
ional boxing program.
Joe Louis, bhooked to meet Bob
Pastor at the Garden January 29
and a leading contender for heavy
weight laurels, meets Stanley
Ketchell of Trenton, N. J., in a
four-round exhibition at Buffale
tomorrow night, Ketchell is sub
stituting for Lou Poster, Potts
town, Pa., who was stricken with
influenza and had to retire from
the match.
The Brown Bomber also is
scheduled to appear at Minneapo
lis Thursday night for three two
round exhibition matches.
Teddy Yarosz, former middle
weight king, who lost his crown to
Babe Risko a year ago, tackles
Solly Krieger of New York, in a
ten-rounder at the New York
Hippodrome Wednesday.
Kid Chocolate, former ruler of
the featherweights continuing his
attempt for a 2 comeback, collides
with Johnny Erickson of New
York in another ten at New Ha
ven Wednesday. Bob Olin once
light heavyweight champion, is
booked for a ten round bout with
Tiger Jack Fox of Spokane Friday
night. ’
Widest Gain Since
Last June Made By
Stocks Last Week
NEW' YORK, —(#)— The stock
market last week scored the widest
gain since June.
TFuel for the rise, brokers said
was provided by continued accel
eration in heavy industry symptoms
of further expansion in retail trade
and reassurance derived in finan
cial circles from the {one of the
President’s budget mesage.
Injecting an element of caution
into sentiment, however, was the
impasse growing out of the Gen
eral Motors wage dispute result
ing in strikes in important divi
siong of this company.
An aarently contradictory de
velopment was the run-up of 4 %
in General Motors shares to finish
the week at 66 1. It was the most
active issue,
In some circles this was ex
plained in terms of the organiza
tion”s December sales which ex
panded 42 per cent over 1935 to
establish a new record for that
month.
Steel shares were In demand as
the week drew to a close, reflecy
ing quieckening of output, heavy
railway equipment buying and
plang for warship construction,
The utility group kicked over
the traces and moved out of the
rut.
| Amusements had the benefit
{of swelling moving picture re
'venues. Coppers were brought into
the Ilimelight by rising export
prices. Stepping up on government
aireraft rogramg aided that grou.
Measured by the Associated Press
average of 60 stocks, the markekt
Irose 22 to 71.6. Transactions
'sw@lled to 13,028,656 shares from
i 8,829,693 the week rrevious.
‘ Although some profit taking was
Ireported at the close of the week
it was said this was likely attract
led by the speed of the previous ad-
Ivance.
No Response From
Cotton Noted Last
Week in New York
By BERNARD S. O HARA
NEW YORK.—(AP)—BuII mar
ket atmosphere prevailed in many
commodities last week, but it left
cotton unresponsive.
In 2 narrow and hesitant affair
from start to finish, with net
changes from running from an
advance of 30 cents to a decline of
25 cents a bale,
Traders were disappointed at the
market's inertia in the face of
favorable reports on mill opera
tions and cotton goods distribu
tion.
There were indications of some
halt to buying operations by reason
much; they've seen exactly six pic
tures in the last 17 years.
“Mary Rogers, ‘daughter of Will,
gets the leading feminine role in
“The Last Slaver.”
Looks like Herbert Marshall for
the lead with Marlene Dietrich in
“Angel.”
Douglas Fairbanks, jr., will come
to Hollywood from London in Feb
ruary to appear in a couple of
flickers,
Clarke Gable and Joan Crawford
soon will be teamed again — this
time in “Saratoga,” one of half a
dozen race track pictures now in
preparation.
Luise's Shadow
Everywh(;i'ei ti\az Luise Rainer
goes you see Playwright Clifford
Odets.
Robert Taylor's new contract
brings him about $4,000 a week.
Best friend of veteran vaudeville
trouperg is Helen Broderick; she
gets three or four of them into
one of her pictures.
Watch for a young man named
Bill Bradl, a discovery by Irar
Roach. If he's as handsome and
talented as excited whisperers in
sist, Gable may ag well go back to
the oil fields and Crosby to the
pickle factory.
| There’'s one actor in the colony
Iwho doesn’t seem to be afraid of
|getting old. Every time he gets
ia shade bibulous, we calls all his
friends, solemnly ennounces a bir
thday, and invites ’em to a party.
He had 31 birthdays in 1936, _
New Revue Is Just What Doctor Ordered
for Br oadway’s Eye.and,EaT Trouble t
BEATRICE LILLIE AND BERT LAHR FROLIC IN
“THE SHOW IS ON”’; CRITICS HAIL CORNELL
IN ANDERSON DRAMA, TOO
BY GEORGE ROSS ¢
NEA Service Staff Correspondent
NEW YORK—What this town needed-—what this town can ever
ase—is a brighttand beautiful musical show. And onee more the Shu
rts have provided i,
“The Show Is On,” their latest extravaganza, Wwas a glistening
~hristmas ‘package, tinselled wity talent, song, dance, sprightly. laugh
ter and pulchritundinous faces,
It is peopled by suc¢h ever-reliable performers as Beatrice Lillie
and Brt laht, Aitzi Maylair. and Paul Haakon, Reginald Gardiner
ind Gracé Barrie, and its settinzs and costumes are the lavish crea
tions of the bold artist, young Vincente Minnelli..
In fact, it was Mr. Minnelli who put “The Show Is On” together,
marshalling the innumerable ingredients that go into a great mausical,
For music he has gome 10 a host of tunesmiths, among them George
and Ira Gershwin, Dietz and Schwartz and Hoagy Carmichael, Her
man Hupefeld and Yips Harburg, and for the sketches, he solicited Moss
Hart and the late David Freedman—and there must be at least another
. G P UGN ee N R TR SN ol BLe NL,
dozen contributors of the even
ing’s material. And Mr. Minnell
himself blended the colors in a
rich harmony, unlimited in imagi
nation or expense account,
The sum total adds up to a fes
tive, gay revue, worth anybody’s
money in the coin of the realm.
The show knows no lulls bu:
moves swiftly from blackout o
taubleaux to dances by the prin
cipals end ensembles. . Miss Lillie
and Mr. Lahr were never more
hilarious on_a public platform.
Miss Lillie even rises from the
public platform temporarily o
waft above the audience in a
crescent maoon, throwing pink
garters to lucky gentlemen. As
for Mr, Lzhr, he’' harvests Hhs
laughs whenever he moves onts
the stage.
There are many numbers, devot
ed to comedy, music and deft
dances, and while they all are not
equally brilliant, the rough spots
are few and fer between. Surely,
the ether waves will hum with a
dulcet tune called “Little Old
Lady” and another by the Gersh
wins namde “By Strauss.” “The
Show Is On” is the most satisfy
ing musical of the season.
Cornell As Malay
~ In a festive week, the most im
portant dramatic event was Kath
arine Cornell's appearance in
Maxwell Anderson’s .new drama,
“The Wingless Victory.” This is
the szga wherein Miss Corneil
portrays the Malayan princess who
marries a New lEngland sea cap
tain with tragiec results. For Mr.
Anderson has translated his ser
mon against race prejudice into a
play about the bigotry that
greeted such a marriage. “The
Wingless Victory” finds the dusky
skinned princess in her hushand's
New England household where
of the Commodity Credit Corpor
ation’s plan for releasing govern
men loan cotton, altohugh the re
lease price was viewed as in line
with the prevailing price level.
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Katharine Cornell . . . the stage!
is in her full possession. ‘
|
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he is not wanted and where her!
children also meet with crude in
hospitality. ‘
As Mr. Anderson is among the |
most eloquent playwright-poets,
he has filled The Wingless Vic
tory” with stirring speeches, many
of them in blank verse form, soc
that they assume a classic statura
when they are spoken. And as she
s usually counted upon to do,
Cornell renders them hero
ically. The stage is in her full pos
session for the drama revolves
Trading sentiment seemed: to re
flect also some temporary pessi-
I s : s
' mism on the export situation.
It was estimated domestic mills
were continuing to use fiber;at an
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA ™
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Beatrice Lillie . . . who throws her pink garters at lucky gentiemen.
about her unwelcome presence Inl
Christian company. Yet, for all
its articulate beauty, it was thol
impression of many that “The |
Wingless‘: Victory” is not Mr.
Anderson’s .most ingpired work;
that: in “parts it is more poetry
than truth.
‘ Lesser Fare
. Two more Broadway entries
were ‘“Aged, 26" a biographical
play about the poet, John Keats,
and “All Iditions,” a comedy
about a super-press agent on the
loose in Manhattan. “Aged, 267 Is
the work of Anne Crawford Flex
‘ner ‘who once gave us “Mrs ~
Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch.”
f!fkhis time she has delved into the
ik s
éxceptionally high rate, and ‘in
i ¥
trade circles the opinion was
given that if foreign consumption
of American colton were of reason-
L~ ERE
libravies to emerge with a schol
arly character study of the poet
but not a theoretically effective
one,
“All Editions” is the brain
storm of Charles Washburn, one
of the most amiable exploiters
along the Rialto, and Clyde North,
a radio writer.. ‘lt ‘has a great
deal to do with ecarnival tempt
resses, carnival men, morticians,
gangsters from “Chi” and local
racketeers and it asks itself, as
the end approaches, “Hey, what's
going on around here.” That also
happens to be the audience’s sen
timent, but any audience that
knows Mr. Washburn, and is at-
Imchod to him, has been asking
that question for years.
\
‘ably gooda proportions, world use
of the American staple would be
running far ahead of the current
craop.
Mysterious (Query Sets Reporter
A-Wondering What's Behind It All
13th?”
l Somebody spent good money to
i day to advertise tpat line in the
'Hflnner-llerald. Who could be
! such a spendthrift as to pay out
{ money to ask such a question?
lAnd why ask it without saying
who is to receive the answer.
l “What time will it be February
| 13th?”
' When people advertise myg\tcr-1
'ious]y something is likely to hap
- pen, or has already happened.
“What time will it be February
| 13th?” may be a code message {0
}?SOmeone. Or it might be that
some person conceived of the Idfl-’il
lor asking the question in-an ad
l\'ertisement and carried through’
' the plan as a joke. Maybhe thlsi
morning the person who paid for!
the advertisement is chuckling at
his home as he pictures hundredsl
of Banner-Herald readers wonder
ing what in the dickens somebody
meant by asking such a fool ques
tion, ‘
Well, what ever the advertise
ment means, it may be that the
mystery will be cieared up later
son. If it doesn’t mean anything
more than some practical jokcr'si
idea of putting one over on the|
publie, today's incident is the last
we'll hear of the business, It not,
we'll hear more of it, |
Thig reporter is reminded of the
time a whole town was set to ask-l
ing questions one morning when;
the residents awoke to find the let-g
terg “TN” painted in green oOn
practically ever lamp post in town,
on the pavement and everywhere
else, almost. or a whole week the
inhabitants who leaned slightely
to jitters were oa edge over the,
possibility of something dreadful
happening. Some people thought|
it meant the end of the world was
Beware The Cough
From a common cold
That Hangs On
No matter how many medicines
you have tried for your cough, chest
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eomulsion not only contains the
soothing elements common to many
remedies; such as, Syrup of White
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tract of Licorice Root, fluid extract
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also has fluid extract of li)ecac for
its powerful phlegm loosening
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Thousands f doctors use Creo
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well as in their practice knowing
how Creomulsion aids nature to
soothe the inflamed membranes and
| letters carriel a personal message
lto them and were just a little bit
::Lm)reln-lmivf‘. ‘When the local pap
jer came out that week it .was ge
{ vealed that the letters, “TN” meant
[ “Trade Now” and the whole thing
!\\-.'u a local merchant's idea of ad
| vertising. He certainly managed
gln set the town talking. ;
{ b S S
'!AG. COLLEGE COW :
I FINISHES RECORD
{ PETERBOROUGH, N. H.—A
inmv record, exceeding the average
of the Guernsey breed for her age
lund class has just been completed
by Champion’s Imogene 346231 of
| Athens, tested and owned by
the Georga State College of Agri
culture ad annnouncged by the Am
lm‘iv:m Guernsey Cattle elub 'is
14,2564.6 ounds of milk and ¢47.0
‘pl’fl nds of butter fat, &
EXPECTANT MOTHERS
W OMEN whae
" suffer every
month ~— who may
o have sideache or
"& - headache associated
i with {fanctional
\ sge: @ disturbances, and
i‘%'} » those about to be-
Ay AL come mothers will
53& ; ;’@@ find Dr. Pierce's
s b Favorite Prescrip
tion a dependable tonic. Read what Mrs.
Ben Baker of 1432 Ashley St., Alexandria,
La., said:: “I ' used DxudPiercc's Favorite
Prescription as a tonic during expachnfi
on two different occasions and it was
great help to me, I could eat more and was
soon relieved of that tired feeling.” = )
Originally prescribed for his patients by
Dr., R, V. Pierce nearly 70 years ago.
Buy of your neighborhood drugfl DOW,
New size, tabs, 50 cts, Liquid SI.OO & $1.35,
heal the irritated tissues as the
germ-laden phlegm is loosened and
expelled. Druggists also know the
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Creomulsion is guaranteed satise
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Doa’t worry through another sle:s;
less night—phone or go get a bo
of Creomulsion right now. (Adv.)
PAGE FIVE